You're currently signed in as:
User
Add TAGS to your cases to easily locate them or to build your SYLLABUS.
Please SIGN IN to use this feature.
https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1e32?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09
[PEOPLE OP PHILIPPINE ISLANDS v. PANTALEON GONZALEZ ET AL.](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1e32?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
{case:c1e32}
Highlight text as FACTS, ISSUES, RULING, PRINCIPLES to generate case DIGESTS and REVIEWERS.
Please LOGIN use this feature.
Show printable version with highlights

[ GR No. 35141, Oct 29, 1931 ]

PEOPLE OP PHILIPPINE ISLANDS v. PANTALEON GONZALEZ ET AL. +

DECISION

56 Phil. 253

[ G. R. No. 35141, October 29, 1931 ]

THE PEOPLE OP THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. PANTALEON GONZALEZ ET AL., DEFENDANTS. MARIANO ARGUELLES, PATRICIO MERCADO, AND TELESFORO FUEGO, APPELLANTS.

D E C I S I O N

IMPERIAL, J.:

Pantaleon Gonzalez,  Patricio Mercado, Telesforo Fuego, and Mariano Arguelles were charged with the crime of robbery in the Court of First Instance of Tarlac, upon the following  information:
"That on the night of September 20,  1930, in the municipality of Paniqui, Province of Tarlac, Philippine Islands, the aforenamed accused,  acting in pursuance of a previous agreement and helping one  another,  did willfully, unlawfully, and feloniously,  with animus lucrandi enter an inhabited  house belonging to one  Maria  Arroyo,  passing through a window, and having broken the lock of a closed box, opened  it and took  possession of a basket containing money,  jewelry, and  valuable papers belonging to the said Maria Arroyo, to wit:
One ring set with a diamond, valued at.
P900.00
One pair ear-rings with diamonds, valued at
500.00
One gold ring with three diamonds, valued at
120.00
One ring with seven diamonds, valued at
100.00
One ring set with seven diamonds in a circle valued at.
70.00

Two gold rosary beads, valued at

40.00
One gold chain, valued at
25.00
One gold ring set with pearls, valued at
15.00
One American gold coin with a chain, valued at
65.00
One gold coin, valued at
45.00
Three small gold coins, valued at.
30.00
Spanish and American silver coins, valued at
17.50
Two Insurance policies and other papers of value
9,000.00
Bank notes to the value of
4,850.00
 
___________
 
15,777.50
equivalent to 78,887 pesetas and 10 centavos.

"Contrary to law."
Pantaleon Gonzalez demanded a separate trial.   The case against his co-defendants Patricio Mercado, Telesforo Fuego, and Mariano Arguelles was tried,  and after presentation of all the evidence, the court found them guilty of the crime of robbery, with the aggravating  circumstance of nocturnity, and sentenced each of them to six years and one day of presidio mayor, the accessaries of law, to indemnify the offended party jointly and severally in the sum of P15,882.50, and each to pay one-fourth of the costs.   These defendants appealed.

Between  seven  and eight o'clock on the evening of September 20, 1930, Maria Arroyo, the offended party, entered the sola of her  house in the municipality  of Paniqui, Province of Tarlac,  to open a wooden box which she used as a safe for her jewelry and other valuables.   As she was about to insert the key into the padlock, she noticed that the wire with which  the lock was  fastened was cut, which caused her to cry  out.  She saw  an open penknife near the box and picked it up; suddenly, she was seized by the hand, and turning her face  to see who it was, recognized Pantaleon Gonzalez, who, as  soon as he had secured the  penknife, started to run and disappeared.  When she recovered from the shock of the  incident, she noticed that the basket in which she had  kept and which actually contained the jewelry, money, receipts, and policy listed in the information, to  the value of  P15,882.50, had  disappeared.   Realizing that she had been robbed, the offended party reported the matter to the municipal police and to  the Constabulary.

First Lieutenant Bernardo Saberola, Commandant of the Division of the Constabulary in Paniqui, at once made an investigation, employing a number of soldiers.  One of these reported that he had  seen  Mariano Arguelles that night hanging around rather suspiciously in the vicinity  of the offended party's house.  The man was arrested and upon investigation,  denied  any  participation in the robbery. Subsequently, however, during another investigation made by Constabulary Lieutenant Saturnino Panganiban, said Arguelles admitted voluntarily that he had taken part in the robbery at the invitation of Pantaleon Gonzalez, from whom he received a certain  sum of money,  and that said Gonzalez, together with Patricio Mercado entered the house through a window; that when they left he saw them carrying a basket containing a number of articles and a roll of bank notes.  Arguelles made  the confession in writing (Exhibit C) under oath  before the justice of the peace of  Paniqui ; and he there spontaneously and  categorically admits his participation in the crime in the manner stated above. Patricio Mercado and  Telesforo Fuego were  likewise  detained  and  in the course of their investigation admitted their guilt  and signed under oath their  confessions,  the instruments Exhibits A and  B, respectively.  Mercado confessed  that he climbed through the window of the house with Pantaleon Gonzalez, and together they carried away the basket containing the money, jewelry, and other valuable papers.  And Fuego confessed in the aforesaid instrument that he followed his co-accused, remained in the street near the house on the lookout, and that when Gonzalez and Mercado came down, they had a basket and a  roll of bank notes.   None of the  stolen objects were recovered.

The  appellants assign the  following errors:
  1. The court a quo erred in admitting the alleged confessions of the accused, Exhibits A, B, C,  D, and  E, when the same were obtained by means  of  force, violence,  duress, intimidation, and fraud.
  2. The court a quo erred in  not giving credence to the testimonies of the accused which were made in a very natural, spontaneous, and convincing manner.
  3. The court a quo erred in finding the accused Mercado, Fuego, and Arguelles, guilty of the  crime charged."
All the arguments of the defense  deal with the probative value of the confessions Exhibits A,  B, and C, and the sworn statements Exhibits D  and  E, made by Patricio Mercado and Telesforo Fuego respectively, before the justice of the peace of Paniqui, all of which, it is alleged, were extorted from them against their will by illegal means.  The evidence, which we have carefully examined, does not bear out this contention.  It appears that the three confessions were made by the  appellants  before the justice of the peace and the witnesses, while the Constabulary officers and soldiers who conducted or took a part in the investigation were absent; and the justice of the peace  took this precaution in obedience, so he says, to instructions from the judge of the Court of First Instance of the district. The record contains nothing to support the insinuation of the defense that the appellants were subjected to maltreatment as a result of which they made the confessions.   After reviewing  all the evidence we are convinced that the appellants' guilt has been established beyond all reasonable doubt.

The crime  committed  falls under article 508 of the Penal Code and is  punished in accordance with the second paragraph of said article with presidio  correctional in the medium degree  to presidio mayor in the minimum degree, in as much as the accused carried no arms and the value of the effects  stolen exceeds 1,250  pesetas; this penalty must  be applied in the maximum degree because the commission of the crime was accompanied by the  aggravating circumstance of nocturnity, of which the  appellants took  advantage.  With  reference to the indemnity, however,  we accept the Attorney-General's recommendation that the value of the policy be deducted, as the offended party has not lost its value but may obtain another copy of  the policy.  The value of the stolen receipts  may be considered  as a real pecuniary loss because the chances  are that the credits evidenced thereby cannot be recovered; however, any amount the  offended party may hereafter collect from her debtors upon such debts,  shall be deducted  from the amount of the indemnity.  Therefore, the civil  liability must be  reduced to P10,382.50.

With the sole  modification that  the appellants  shall indemnify the offended party in the sum of  only P10,382.50, from which any  sum she may succeed  in collecting from such of her debtors as are referred  to in the stolen receipts shall be deducted, the judgment appealed from is affirmed, with costs against the appellants.  So ordered.

Johnson, Street, Malcolm, Villamor, Ostrand, Romualdez, and  Villa-Real, JJ., concur.

tags